The ability of ultraviolet radiation to cause skin cancer is well established. Yet, it is only “generally believed” that the development of dark skin by people in Africa was an adaptive response to protect them from the damaging effects of UV rays. Also, the harmful impact of UV rays
in the survival and/or reproductive fitness of individuals are “uncertain.”
But a paper published
on February 26 in the Proceedings of the
Royal Society Breports evidence that
dark skin evolved in early humans living in Africa to protect them from the
damaging effects of UV radiation. It provides proof that skin cancer can affect
young people in the reproductive age.
Unlike light-skinned
people, dark-skinned people have relatively lesser risk of suffering from skin
cancer. And even if they do have skin cancer, it is typically restricted to the
soles and palms that are less pigmented. The reason — the presence of
brown/black eumelanin in dark-skinned people that filters out the UV radiation.
So much so that dark-skinned people enjoy a 500- to 1,000-fold protection
compared with light-skinned people.
But hominins who lived
some 2-3 million years ago in the East African savannah were probably not black
skinned. The loss of body hair to facilitate sweating and heat loss
(thermoregulation) for the first time exposed the bare skin, which was about
white or pale. The skin of chimpanzees — our nearest primate relative — under
its thick fur of hair is pale or white.
Genetic evidence
suggests that about 1.2 to 1.8 million years ago Africans living in the hot,
open savannah that has highest levels of UVB radiation throughout the year were
under selective pressure to retain a variant of MC1R gene that encodes for
effective dark colouration of the skin (melanization).
But the key notion
that skin cancer served as a selective force for the development of dark skin
has been dismissed on the grounds that lethal skin cancer is rarely seen in
young people during the reproductive years.
The author of the
study Mel Greaves from the Institute of Cancer Research, Sutton, Surrey, U.K.,
cites the high incidence of skin cancer at a young age in albinos — who are
white-skinned due to a disorder of melanin pigmentation — to question the misconception.
Albinos are seen in black ethnic groups throughout sub-Saharan Africa (1 in
5,000), Ibo in Nigeria and the Tongo in Zimbabwe (1 in 1,000).
The prevalence of skin
cancer in African albinos in low latitude countries like Tanzania, Cameroon,
and Nigeria is high and it occurs at an early age. While focal skin lesions can
be seen in children as young as five years, overt skin cancer can be seen in
most albinos by the age of 20 years.
Albinos in several
other low-latitude countries like India, Papua New Guinea and Panama run the
same high risk of developing skin cancer. Albino mice exposed to UV radiation
suffer similarly.
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